Mark Thomas - 10 Step Technical SEO Game Plan (annotated edition)
1. "A 10 Step Technical SEO Game
Plan: Sustainable Website
Optimisation"
#BrightonSEO
2015
2. “Improve the web by providing data that helps
people make their web presence accessible,
relevant and effective”.
DeepCrawl is a web crawler that will tell you everything you need to know about the health of your website.
3. • DeepCrawl MD
• 12 years Digital
• Proclaiming the
virtues of brilliant
Technical SEO
@MN_Thomas
4. A 10 Step Technical SEO Game Plan:
Sustainable Website Optimisation
If you have ever struggled to have your voice heard and recommendations prioritised then hopefully this is going to help.
Let me define the title.
Technical SEO – I’m talking about all the work you do to make the
(A) Content organisation better
(B) The browsing experience better.
9. “The notion of you being the stimulus
for search will likely fade. Instead, any
change of state will passively spark
these implicit searches that will do
things on your behalf.”
Stefan Weitz, Senior Director of Search, Bing
This is a great quote from Bing – the age of Personal Assistants is upon us.
We move from the conscious to the sub-conscious. Your every act stands to passively spark implicit search.
Cool or Not? A discussion for another time…
The good news is that great Technical SEO will always underpin search.
11. "Even a basic understanding of what to
look for in technical SEO can get you far. So
many people today focus too heavily on
off-page SEO, but if a site is technically
flawed, it won't matter how many links you
have or how good your content is.”
Erin Everhart, SEO Manager, The Home Depot
This quote from Erin at The Home Depot captures my experience completely.
If a site is technically flawed – the campaigns you’re running won’t matter.
12. Your website is part of the DNA of every campaign.
But I want to go further.
13. I believe your website architecture is the skeleton holding everything together and I want you to be considered the backbone of
your organisation.
As important as the people that used to choose store locations, dress windows, organise stock displays – rolled into one. The
lynchpin.
I’m like a dog with a bone when it comes to an analogy.
Do you know the medical term for bone tissue?
14. Osseous: consisting of or turned into bone
Osseous tissue, is the major structural and
supportive connective tissue of the body
SEO nestling right in the middle.
16. Step 1: Engage
The end in mind is implementation of your ideas and (probably) recognition.
Who do you need to influence, ultimately, to get these things done?
19. What are the company and marketing
objectives for the coming year?
Go and talk to the business – but more important, listen. As all good commercial people know, you have two ears and one
mouth and you should use them accordingly.
23. Seek first to understand before
you seek to be understood
Seek first to understand where everyone is coming from. This does take effort and discipline.
24. Do your colleagues believe SEO = TRICKS?
Do they simply view you negatively from the outset?
25. Engaged teams support recommendations
because they care more.
Engaged teams are more productive
because they understand what they’re
doing.
Engaged teams innovate more because
they want their organisation to succeed.
Ultimately – if you engage all teams you’re going to be working in a supportive and productive environment.
26. Step 2: Comprehensively Audit
So now you’re everyone’s best friend you need to get into the data.
27. Moz 2015 Technical Audit
Linkdex Audit coming up…
Lots of good sources but the Moz 2015 Audit is super and Jono is going to give you lots of tips on execution shortly.
28. You’ve got two KPIs to concentrate on
But I do want to impress on you the DeepCrawl view of the world. We believe you have two key KPIs to nail.
32. But here’s the variation – I crawled 20 different sites and managed to find 9 that look vastly different to one another – These
range from a very low number of unique pages with a high canonical footprint to 99% unique and an efficient crawl environment.
In the middle you’ll notice a yellow slice of the pie – that’s duplicate content – nice opportunity there.
The specific charts don’t matter. The point I want to get across is the variety in architecture both bots and humans encounter.
Your audit will vary greatly to the person sitting next to you. You should consider benchmarking competitors.
34. There’s no need to fail fast
Solution Sell Two Key Wins – solution selling means building a water tight case around your recommendation – again Jono will
talk more about that later.
Be conscious of fiscal and resource constraints. You will have a long list but champion two that you are confident will deliver a
clear ROI.
36. opportunity abounds for improvements
As we saw on the pie chart slide, opportunity abounds for improvements.
Your architecture is the present that just keeps giving.
Broken links, missing titles, speed issues….
37. Here’s another quick example of a simple win.
On this site, when you look at a comparison between the pages discovered by a crawler (found by following every link a level at a
time) – those being submitted in their sitemap – and those pages in Google Analytics receiving traffic, we can see that 182 have
been ‘orphaned’
These are still receiving more than 2 visitors in the past 30 days but not passing any authority.
38. Step 4: Share Architectural Insight
this will be available from a comprehensive audit.
40. Support all the ‘blockers’ with unique data
ContentPaid Social CRO UX
Technical Architecture
Dev
The data you alone are viewing should be underpinning numerous departments
Here’s a few examples:
41. Help your content team
visualise website growth
Content
Let’s take the content team
1st up – you should be reporting the growth of the website
Here we have a trend of the number of unique pages on this site over the past 12 months
Growth of 20% - great KPI to be aware of.
42. Help your colleagues understand the technical
quality of their content
Content
@DeepCrawl
2nd Up - Surface problematic areas of the website.
Let’s look at another example:
43. Content
This is an example of a well known website –we can see 9,000 thin pages in this report.
44. Here is an example of one of the pages from the list
We can see this is a thin page.
45. Content
This is the background of the page in question – returning a 200, indexed, unique – THIN.
46. We can see Google last cached this on 22nd March
Once everyone realizes that low quality content is in fact present, then you can proceed with how to rectify the problems at
hand.
Determine which are ok (there aren’t many), which are truly low quality, which should be noindexed, and which should be
nuked. It’s the type of issue that threatens to return.
47. Offer to extract insight from contentContent
3rd opportunity to support your Content teams –
This example comes from a company in The Netherlands.
They were looking to check the tone of voice on each page
The simple answer is to survey every page and find out which had the correct copy – you can do this with a simple extraction for
your colleagues.
Let’s move on to the UX teams.
48. Visualise site architecture to help UX
UX
Once again we’ll see the contract between sites.
Which unique pages are buried at 9 or 10 clicks from the homepage?
Both examples of architecture look pretty good – most unique content is reached within 3 to 4 clicks.
50. Paid
Final suggestion with a slide is for your Paid teams – how about setting specific automated tests of their Primary Landing Pages?
If any go down you’re instantly notifying them – easy ROI calculation.
There are lots of examples – Social seem to get the budget these days. Effective OG implementation can lead to a significant
boost in traffic – I saw a great presentation from Pete Campbell recently on this subject.
How about supporting CTOs with feedback on the performance of their DEV team – one step at a time perhaps.
I’ve dropped it in a few times but COMPETITOR ANALYSIS can support the whole business. Opportunities to increase your
taxonomy – this is big, add blog content here.
51. Step 5: Analyse Impact
back to the programme. We’ve engaged, audited, sold two recommendations, supported other teams – now time to analyse.
You know how to do this but ensure you link back to those business goals.
52. Step 6: Automate
it still surprises me how people will manually perform so much of their research.
Regularly perform your audit and analysis – it’s a sustainable way of working
Commercial organisations need thinkers rather than workers.
53. Drive leadership, innovation,
increased time influencing strategy
A lot of sustainability can sound boring but it’s for the greater good of allowing you to spend more time on research and the
interesting stuff.
58. Build a cache of your website over time
Build a cache of your website over time – you need to understand what ‘normal’ – hopefully ‘good’ – looks like. When changes
come you need reference points. Your architecture should be paramount and you should be the person that knows!
59. Step 8: Be There In The Hour of Need
is all about the time when those around you are most worried about how things are going.
Migration.
60. All site releases should be pre-tested
All site releases should be pre-tested > I’m still amazed at how many headlines are made on the front page of the FT when a
company gets this wrong. There is great risk involved but tech SEOs hold cards they might not even realist.
Testing the impact on Search in a staging environment is entirely possible – help them out.
61. Step 9: Simplify Reporting
is a reminder to ensure your communication isn’t losing people.
64. Here’s a neat example of a report we’ve seen from a client of ours in Texas – even non-tech people can get their heads around
this.
65. Step 10: Control The Future
I feel passionate that you should be the person everyone looks to when it comes to looking at the crystal ball.
You’re informed of how your website is evolving
You have a thirst for news on updates
But you’re the person advising on caution when people are getting carried away.
What are the individual teams prioritising? –
Engage with everyone and know their position.
Seek first to understand where everyone is coming from. This does take effort and discipline.
Do they simply view you negatively from the outset?
Ultimately – if you engage all teams you’re going to be working in a supportive and productive environment.
Step 2 - So now you’re everyone’s best friend you need to get into the data.
Lots of good sources but the Moz 2015 Audit is super and Jono is going to give you lots of tips on execution shortly.
But I do want to impress on you the DeepCrawl view of the world. We believe you have two key KPIs to nail.
You’re aiming for the Top Right – Gold (Lots of unique pages and an incredibly efficient crawl environment to allow quick discovery).
2nd Up - Surface problematic areas of the website.
Let’s look at another example:
Step 9 is a reminder to ensure your communication isn’t losing people.
.
Step 10 –I feel passionate that you should be the person everyone looks to when it comes to looking at the crystal ball.
You’re informed of how your website is evolving
You have a thirst for news on updates
But you’re the person advising on caution when people are getting carried away.